7/24/2024

speaker
Operator
Operator

Welcome to the FISERV second quarter 2024 earnings conference call. All participants will be in a listen-only mode until the question and answer session begins following the presentation. As a reminder, today's call is being recorded. At this time, I will turn the call over to Julie Cheriel, Senior Vice President of Investor Relations at FISERV.

speaker
Julie Cheriel
Senior Vice President of Investor Relations at FISERV

Thank you, and good morning. With me on the call today are Frank Busignano, our Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer, and Bob Howe, our Chief Financial Officer. Our earnings release and supplemental materials for the quarter are available on the investor relations section of Fiserv.com. Please refer to these materials for an explanation of the non-GAAP financial measures discussed on this call, along with a reconciliation of those measures to the nearest applicable GAAP measures. Unless otherwise stated, performance references are year-over-year comparisons. Our remarks today will include forward-looking statements about, among other matters, expected operating and financial results and strategic initiatives. Forward-looking statements may differ materially from actual results and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties. You should refer to our earnings release for a discussion of these risk factors. And now, I'll turn the call over to Frank.

speaker
Frank Busignano
Chairman, President, and CEO

Thank you, Julie. And thank you all for joining us today to discuss second quarter results that bring us closer to another year of double-digit organic revenue and adjusted earnings per share growth. Fiserv delivered strong results across our businesses, with second quarter adjusted earnings per share of $2.13 of 18%, driven by continued healthy revenue growth and further operating margin expansion. Adjusted revenue growth was 7%, and adjusted operating margin rose 160 basis points to 38.4%. Organic revenue growth was 18%. We can point to many highlights in our business during the quarter, including Clover revenue of 28%, accelerated organic revenue growth in financial solutions to 8%, multiple wins with marquee clients, including Verizon and Apple, plus new clients in important verticals such as petro, gaming, government, and healthcare. Our free cash flow was $1 billion in the quarter and $4 billion over the last 12 months. And we returned $1.5 billion to shareholders via share repurchases. This month, we're celebrating the 40th anniversary of Fiserv, along with the fifth anniversary of the merger between Fiserv and First Data. Our vision back in 2019 was that if we brought together scaled platforms supporting a full breadth of solutions, merchant acquiring, debit and credit issuer services, digital payments of all kinds, and core bank account systems modernized with cloud technology, then clients would find value in the combination and the integration and Fiserv would become a partner of choice with unparalleled global reach. Today, we can see that's exactly what has happened. As we realized revenue and cost synergies over this time, we increased our investment in technology innovation. Our purpose has been to deliver solutions to clients of all kinds, established and new, large and small, local, and global, spanning all verticals. With the proper amount of disrupting ourselves then and now, Fiserv is better able to run, optimize, and grow our business, and now we find ourselves at this moment, singular in our ability to deliver a breadth of leading products across a diverse base of clients and demonstrating accelerated growth for the past three years. After five years of innovation, in some ways, what's old is new again. Let me share three examples of how our clients are engaging in some of our traditional businesses as new ways to add and retain their own customers. First, in merchant acquiring. banks are adding this service as a way to grow with small and medium-sized business customers and choosing Fiserv for its leading solutions, including Clover. We already have nearly 900 financial institutions who offer merchant processing services to their small business clients and thousands more who can still benefit from doing so. As an example, In Q2, we signed a merchant agreement with Connecticut Online Computer Center, known as COCC, which is a client-owned provider of banking technology. The 150 community banks and credit unions on the COCC platform now have access to our acquiring services in support of their own hundreds of thousands of merchants. Second, in digital payments, Cash Flow Central takes the best of consumer bill pay and turns it from a cost center within banks to a revenue generator that appeals to small business with bill payment and presentment capability. In the second quarter, we signed two more Cash Flow Central deals with multi-billion dollar banks for a total of six in the few months since we introduced this solution. Cashflow Central will go live this quarter, and the pipeline remains full. We are finding that as they go down this path, financial institutions are revitalizing their consumer bill pay offerings as well, answering the competition from the direct biller model. First Citizens, a top 20 U.S. bank with more than $200 billion in assets, was one such consumer bill pay win in Q2. As a reminder, Fiserv is the largest provider of bank consumer bill pay services with over 20 million users on our check-free platform. Both Merchant Acquiring Solutions and Cashflow Central are compelling because they provide revenue generating opportunities for our financial institution clients. They also demonstrate a distinct value proposition for small businesses, which includes other products across our issuing and banking businesses. Next, we are integrating these solutions with Experience Digital, or XD, our new online and mobile banking solution. And third, traditional enterprise merchants are turning to software that surrounds their payments functionality to enhance revenue and improve data integration, as we've seen from small businesses. The large and mid-market merchants who have been migrating to our omni-channel platform are increasingly integrating our value-added solutions. These include SnapPay, our ERP-integrated B2B bill presentment platform, GiveSolutions, where we support multiple leading retail and QSR enterprise clients, and data analytics, which I'll discuss a bit later. We continue to invest in new solutions, such as our new dedicated platform for paybacks, which is gaining momentum. In the second quarter, for instance, we were selected by Cantaloupe, a major provider of unattended payment devices, such as vending machines. for our Exchange Payback platform. And we continue to integrate solutions across our two segments. One important example is our new partnership with Apple. That will enable new Apple Pay functionality with two of our next-generation solutions. One is Pay With Points, where the loyalty points residing on the card accounts of our issuer clients can be redeemed for a transaction in the Apple Pay wallet at checkout, serving as currency. We're a natural partner given the breadth of our card accounts on file and our technical capability to maintain account point balances, convert and accept those points as payment, and then reconcile the balances. A second solution is installment loans on credit cards. This is a new feature that presents the consumer with the choice to pay for a purchase in a set of installments when using Apple Pay at checkout. This is differentiating in that consumers have only been provided with the option to pay for a purchase in installments after making a purchase on a credit card. With Apple, we will move this installment loan feature into the checkout flow, giving the consumer choice at the point of purchase. Having this functionality at the point of sale from a digital wallet can drive greater cart conversion, card usage, and spending power. It also enables our issuing partners to more directly compete with buy now, pay later using their existing credit card products. Fiserv is unique in its reach across all parties involved here, the consumer, the digital wallet provider, the issuer, and the merchant. So we see multiple opportunities ahead as we enable this network effect to be a win-win across the ecosystem. So let's turn to our outlook for the business. Based on strong performance in the quarter and conviction in our unique opportunity set, we're raising our adjusted earnings per share outlook to $8.65 to $8.80, an increase of 5 cents across the range. Our revenue outlook is unchanged at 15% to 17% organic growth. This performance for 2024 would represent the 39th consecutive year of double-digit adjusted EPS growth. Turning to our segment highlights. In merchant solutions, starting with small business, we posted 4% volume growth. slightly ahead of the sales volume growth for the Pfizer Small Business Index, which rose 3.2% in Q2, as the pace of growth slowed from April to June. There are multiple reasons why outgrowth can differ from this U.S.-only index, including a global presence and different weightings across verticals. For Clover, we have a very active second half of the year, for new product rollouts. We plan to launch additional restaurant software features that target our sweet spot in casual dining to enhance table management, kitchen operations, inventory, and cost management. In the fourth quarter, we'll be rolling out new software offerings in our two other target verticals, services and retail. We are very pleased with initial sales of our restaurant order kiosk, and now we look forward to two new hardware opportunities. First is the Clover Compact, which we rolled out this month, giving us a broader market opportunity with smaller merchants. And next, an important solution for our restaurant clients, order and pay at the table via a new handheld Clover Flex Pocket coming in August. And we're on pace with our international expansion. Pilots are set to go live in Brazil and Mexico in August, and then in September in Australia, ahead of the 2025 launch. In the enterprise merchant business, a key driver is the ongoing adoption of Commerce Hub, the orchestration layer that allows for easy integration with our growing portfolio of value-added solutions. We now have 230 clients live on Commerce Hub and signed several more in Q2, including two large petro-retailers to extend a leading position in this vertical. Our financial solutions segment posted strong organic revenue growth at 8% in the quarter. above the high end of our 2024 guidance range. We delivered faster organic growth in our banking business, while our core banking and credit union clients continued to drive strong growth in our digital payments business. We're adding new clients as well. In the second quarter, we had another example of winning the core account processing business in an M&A transaction. In this latest case, Sunflower Bank chose Fiserv after announcing the intent to acquire HomeStreet Bank to create a $17 billion bank by assets in January. In issuing, we manage the credit and loan accounts for some of the world's leading issuers and provide technology to issuers and lenders in healthcare, government, and education. In June, we were very pleased to have won a strategic outsourcing agreement with Verizon to support their device financing activity and manage device payment agreements on Fiserv's Optus platform. Verizon chose Fiserv for the flexibility, optionality, and resiliency of our platform on the foundation of a trusted, long-standing relationship that spans multiple solutions. This is another example of extending our issuer and loan processing capability into adjacent verticals. In fact, we want another point-of-sale financing deal with an industrial equipment manufacturer to offer short-term loans through its dealer network across the globe using our First Vision platform. With that, I'll turn it over to Bob to discuss more on outperformance and financials.

speaker
Bob Howe
Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Frank, and good morning, everyone. If you're following along on our slides, I'll cover additional detail on total company and segment performance, starting with our financial metrics and trends on slide four. Our performance in the second quarter showcased our ability to sustain strong revenue growth and margin expansion. Second quarter total company adjusted revenue grew 7% to $4.8 billion, and adjusted operating income grew 12% to $1.8 billion. resulting in an adjusted operating margin of 38.4 percent, an increase of 160 basis points versus the prior year. For the first half of the year, adjusted revenue grew 7 percent to $9.3 billion, and adjusted operating income grew 13 percent to $3.5 billion, resulting in an adjusted operating margin of 37.2 percent, an increase of 180 basis points versus the prior year. Organic revenue grew 18% in the quarter, with strength in both segments. The transitory contribution from Argentina was five points to our total organic growth in the quarter, down from seven points in Q1. In the first six months of the year, organic revenue grew 19%. Second quarter adjusted earnings per share was $2.13, compared to $1.81 in the prior year of 18%, and above previous full-year guidance of 14% to 16%. Year-to-date, our adjusted earnings per share increased 18% to $4, compared to $3.38 in the prior year. Free cash flow for the quarter was $1 billion and $1.5 billion for the first half of the year. We expect free cash flow to be much higher in the second half of this year due to the timing of cash flows for the green tax credit program. Turning to performance by segment, starting on slide five, organic revenue growth in the merchant solution segment was 28 percent in the quarter and 32 percent year-to-date. For the quarter, this includes a 10-point benefit from above-average interest and inflation in Argentina. Without this transitory benefit, organic growth would have been 18 percent. On slide six, we've again included a summary of the impact of excess Argentine inflation and interest on total FISERV and merchant segment revenue, along with the offsetting headwind from currency devaluation, which impacts adjusted revenue. Adjusted revenue growth for merchant solutions was 9% in the quarter and 11% year-to-date. The quarterly results include a 19 percentage point currency headwind, largely from the Argentine peso, after a sharp devaluation in late December last year. Similar to Q1, the currency headwind to adjusted revenue growth was much higher than the inflation and interest tailwind in Q2. Moving to the business lines, small business organic and adjusted revenue growth in the quarter was 35 percent and 13 percent, respectively. Clover revenue grew 28 percent in the second quarter on an annualized payment volume growth of 17 percent. The spread between revenue and volume growth continues to reflect a higher penetration of value-added solutions continued channel mix shift, and value-based pricing. Vast penetration stayed constant sequentially at 20% in Q2, an improvement from prior years where we typically see a seasonal decline from Q1 to Q2. Vast penetration was driven by growth in Clover Capital and the Clover SaaS package and should expand with several new offerings coming in the second half. Overall, we remain on pace to meet our 2026 targets. Enterprise organic and adjusted revenue growth in the quarter was 27% and 9% respectively, driven by transactions growth of 8% and higher VAS penetration. As with small business, organic growth in enterprise includes some transitory benefit from excess inflation and interest in Argentina. We're pleased with the pace of client uptake and growth in Commerce Hub. Daily transactions in Commerce Hub are up 3.5 times from Q1 levels, and clients are increasingly connecting to enhanced solutions. Three of the most popular are pay-by-bank, which allows consumers to pay via ACH payment from their bank account at the point of sale. Online EBT, which lets merchants grow by offering payment via government benefit programs, and digital payouts, which merchants increasingly use to pay employees and vendors. Finally, processing organic and adjusted revenue in the quarter declined by 7% and 8% respectively. This business represents the back-end processing we do for our partners where they own the merchant relationship. A few large processing clients experienced declines in their volumes and revenue in Q2. Year-to-date, processing organic and adjusted revenue are both up 1%, similar to our guidance for flat adjusted revenue over the medium term. Turning to some merchant highlights outside the U.S. First, in EMEA, the general tone of business is improving as inflation is easing and consumer confidence begins to rise across the region. We had a good quarter for new wins and renewals with follow-on business, and we are finding that our professional services capability in the region is a competitive differentiator that reinforces our right to win. We expanded our strategic partnership with BNP Paribas one of the leading banks in Europe, allowing it to extend its current merchant acquiring footprint into Germany. Also in Germany, H&M Group, the second largest clothing retailer in the world, selected us as their strategic partner for point of sale, building on our existing relationship in Mexico and highlighting the value we bring to multinational retail clients. We're also working with Lloyds Banking Group, one of the leading banks in the U.K., and a key partner for Pfizer on a major business transformation program for Cardnet, our merchant acquiring joint venture. Together, we will deliver tailored solutions, including Clover, dynamic currency conversion, and merchant cash advance to add new and grow existing merchant relationships. We've also been selected by Deutsche Bahn, the national railway company of Germany, and one of the largest railway companies in the world to provide terminals network services, and value-added solutions. We extended our relationship with AFSA, one of Africa's largest diversified financial services groups. We will be implementing our full ACWIS solution, or acquiring as a service, which will allow AFSA to process e-commerce transactions in nine African countries. ACWIS integrates multiple value-added solutions, including payment gateway, merchant onboarding, merchant portal, OmniPay back office, OpenFX, and real-time fraud monitoring. And finally, we've extended our merchant acquiring relationship with Zabka Polska, the largest convenience store chain in Central and Eastern Europe, based in Poland, with over 11,000 stores. We've grown to provide more than 20 products to this innovative client, most recently adding Merchant Cash Advance, a growing value-added solution for us in the region. Moving to Latin America. In Brazil, the extension of our cost relationship to their bill pay locations has begun to ramp with sequential volume growth of over 20% in Q2. In addition, we went live with our pilot for our PIX platform to act as a payment service provider to over 30 merchants. This capability came through the acquisition of SLED in November of 2023 and will open up new growth opportunities from instant payment activity in Brazil. Overall, we continue to grow our instant payment transactions in Brazil and Argentina. In Brazil, we reached more than 400 million transactions in Q2, up 21% from Q1 levels, and we doubled our number of transactions in Argentina. In Asia Pacific, we went live with our pilot merchant acquiring services in New Zealand, a new market for Fiserv. We plan to target omni-channel merchants primarily in the hospitality and retail segments, as well as e-commerce-only merchants, aggregation partners, and payfax. Adjusted operating income in the merchant solution segment increased 18% to $882 million in the quarter, with adjusted operating margin of 290 basis points to 36.6%. Year-to-date, adjusted operating income increased 23% to $1.7 billion, with adjusted operating margin of 360 basis points to to 35.4%. As noted last quarter, interest expense from anticipation revenue is recorded below the operating income line. If the interest costs from anticipation were included in operating income, merchant adjusted operating margins would have expanded 220 basis points for the quarter and 300 year-to-date. Turning to slide seven on the financial solutions segment, organic revenue grew 8% in the quarter and 6% year-to-date. in line with their full-year outlook of 5% to 7%. Looking at the business lines, digital payments, organic, and adjusted revenue each grew by 8% in the quarter. Growth in Zelle transactions continued to be strong at 43%, and we signed one of our largest bank clients yet on Zelle, First Horizon Bank, with $82 billion in assets. And the pipeline includes other large prospects. We continue to see strong demand from clients for FedNow and RTP integration. In Q2, we signed 32 FIs to FedNow, bringing our total signed to nearly 300. In issuing, organic and adjusted revenue grew 9% and 4% respectively in the quarter, driven by account growth internationally and new loan accounts in North America. Another growth vertical that we've been highlighting is government. where we continue to win and convert large programs, including the California Employment Development Department, which has enrolled over 1 billion of our Money Network prepaid cards, funding nearly $5 billion. In Q2, we won an electronic funds transfer mandate with a major U.S. agency, which should help extend our double-digit growth in the federal market. We also won several state and local deals on the merchant side of the business, including Texas, Arizona, North Carolina, and the city of San Francisco. Meanwhile, we will continue to make strides with prior large wins, implementing the first phase of the target program with output services, though we expect the vast majority of revenue will start in Q1 2025 when the CircleCard accounts begin to go live. Issuing has a meaningful and growing presence outside the U.S., and we have been investing to roll out the next generation of First Vision, our international operating platform. In Q2, we won our first client on the new First Vision platform in Brazil. Banking organic and adjusted revenue grew 6% and 4% respectively in the quarter. Excluding periodic revenue, organic revenue grew 4% in the quarter. We had two Finzec wins this quarter, including Metropolitan Commercial Bank, a $7 billion bank, and an existing Fiserv core client that has decided to build a migration path to Finzec. The pipeline remains robust, including embedded finance opportunities, and we completed the integration of Finzec with Commerce Hub. This allows our enterprise merchants to embed a robust suite of financial services for their customers across shopping and checkout experiences. Second quarter adjusted operating income for the financial solution segment was up 6% to $1.1 billion, and adjusted operating margin was consistent with a very strong second quarter last year at 45.9%. Year-to-date, adjusted operating income for the segment was up 6% to $2.1 billion, with adjusted operating margin of 80 basis points to 45%. Now, let me wrap up with some remaining details on the financials. The corporate adjusted operating loss was $134 million in the quarter and $282 million year-to-date, in line with our expectations. The adjusted effective tax rate in the quarter was 19.9% and 19.1% for the first half, and we continue to expect the full year rate to be approximately 20%. Total debt outstanding was $25.5 billion on June 30th. Our debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio was steady at 2.8 times within our target leverage range. During the quarter, we repurchased 10 million shares $1.5 billion, bringing our total cash return to shareholders for the last 12 months to just over $5 billion and nearly $15 billion since the 2019 merger. We have 32 million shares remaining authorized for repurchase at the end of the quarter. Turning to slide 9, as Frank said earlier, we are raising our full-year adjusted earnings per share outlook to a range of $8.65 to $8.80. up from $8.60 to $8.75, and an acceleration in forecasted adjusted EPS growth to 15 to 17 percent from 14 to 16 percent. We are maintaining our 2024 organic revenue growth outlook of 15 to 17 percent and raising our estimate for adjusted operating margin expansion to more than 135 basis points compared to at least 125 basis points. Previously, our organic growth guidance assumed seven points of contribution from excess inflation and interest in Argentina. But during Q2, we saw faster than expected decline in both measures. This more rapid return to the historic average is good news for our Argentine business and overall stability in the region. However, the extra revenue contribution will now be less this year. Based on the latest economist consensus, We now assume four points of benefit from excess inflation and interest this year, down from seven points. Nevertheless, we are reiterating our previous organic growth guidance for the year, despite exogenous shifts affecting our business. This capability has become a hallmark of Fiserv today. It is a testament to the adaptability of our business model that comes from a broad product portfolio, diverse client base, resourceful management team, and global reach. This quarter, we offset the lower inflation and interest benefit in Argentina with additional anticipation revenue, another quarter of dollar turista revenue, and other growth across the company. Our full year outlook of 15% to 17% total company organic growth, less the four-point transitory benefit from inflation and interest in Argentina, puts our normalized growth at 11% to 13% for 2024. This is in line with our medium-term guidance of 9% to 12%, which assumes macro factors from Argentina continue to normalize. The forecasted impact from foreign currency exchange remains 8.5%, and we anticipate will continue to be a stronger, though declining, headwind to adjusted revenue growth relative to the tailwind from excess inflation and interest. Wrapping up with free cash flow, first I'd like to note a change to our cash flow reporting. we moved the Clover Capital and LATAM anticipation activity to the investing section of the cash flow statement, beginning in the second quarter. We re-evaluated the presentation in our cash flow statement, given a significant increase in the merchant cash advance activity. This change is consistent with how our peers account for these activities, and the additional disclosure will provide greater transparency to our investors. This move affected our free cash flow since those amounts are no longer included in cash flows from operating activities. So, we are adjusting our full-year free cash flow outlook accordingly by increasing our guidance to $4.7 billion from $4.5 billion since we expected $200 million of outflows for merchants' cash advances. when we originally set our 2024 outlook. With that, let me turn the call back to Frank for some closing remarks.

speaker
Frank Busignano
Chairman, President, and CEO

Thanks, Bob. There's another value creation opportunity within post-merger Fiserv, and that's data. The proposition for us in extracting intelligence from the massive amounts of data that we generate daily is significant and can be an important growth driver beyond the medium term. Three years ago, long before AI was the hot topic it is today, we assembled a team of internal and external experts in the fields of data science and AI. We gave them a mandate to harness all of the data naturally captured through Fiserv transactions and account processing activity to drive actionable intelligence for us, the marketplace, and our merchant and financial institution clients. There are three advantages that Fiserv has in its data. Ours is available in real time. It's granular to the transaction level. And it's multifaceted in that it spans merchant, issuing, and banking activities. This makes our data quite powerful to apply in anti-fraud solutions, which we are doing internally with plans for a client-facing solution this fall. Our first great application for the market is the Fiserv Small Business Index, a real-time assessment of consumer spending at millions of small businesses published monthly. It maximizes the features of FISERV data with its timely release just two days after month end, a detailed look at trends by industry and geography, and the inclusion of non-card spending data such as cash and checks. We're also working to support clients in their AI journeys as they invest to process and understand their own data. Clients are recognizing that we can efficiently add buy-serve data and intelligence to help take decision-making to the next level. It's a major value-added solution that we're already testing with several of our largest clients and on the Clover platform. We're still in the early stages of delivering our data and intelligence solutions, but the opportunity is significant given the power of our integrated platforms and our unmatched scale, breadth, and investment. Finally, I'd like to thank our more than 40,000 employees for their steadfast commitment to our vision, and hard work on the day-to-day execution. It's clearly led to our leadership in product and innovation and the strong results you're seeing us report today. Together, we strive to achieve excellence every day on behalf of our clients, partners, and shareholders. Thank you for your time today. And now, operator, please open the line for questions.

speaker
Operator
Operator

Thank you. We would now like to open the phone lines for questions. For today's question and answer session, please limit yourself to one question to ensure ample time to answer as many questions as possible. If you would like to ask a question, you may press star one on your phone. If you would like to withdraw your question, please press star two. For our first question, we'll go to the line of David Toggett from Evercore ISI. Please go ahead.

speaker
David Toggett
Analyst at Evercore ISI

Thank you. Good morning, Frank and Bob. I appreciate the update on new product launches for Clover. and also the vertical market expansion into services and retail. Could you update us on the international expansion in Brazil and Mexico? Frank, you called out some initiatives in Brazil, but in terms of the broader kind of new market launch, kind of post friends and family, what are your expectations for the back half of this year and into 2025?

speaker
Frank Busignano
Chairman, President, and CEO

Yeah, I think first of all when you look at what we're doing on global penetration, we have talked about Mexico, Australia, and Brazil. You should expect Brazil and Mexico in August as a pilot. I would see it as a full ramp in 2025. I treat August like a friends and family. But remember our business in Brazil. You know, the things we've done with Kasha, the things we've done growing the business, you know, probably eight, nine years ago from a startup into a tremendous competitor. So we have, you know, growth projections for that market that would expect it to perform as our business has in Brazil. Mexico, you know, we've built a business there. We continue to grow that business. We feel, you know, Mexico and Brazil build is very similar. That's why you see them coming out together. You know, once again, you know, friends and family in August. And obviously you'll watch that build through the fourth quarter and then, you know, full effect in 25. You know, we feel really great about our position in Australia and what we're going to do in Australia. You'll see us, you know, in September as that, as a friends and family. We have expectations of larger partner wins there also that are very, very highly motivated to have Clover in market in 25. So I don't think you'll get a ton of growth out of it this year. we'll update you later in the year on our expectations against 25, but those bills are in full force. We have partners who want it bad, and we see the market demands for all of that, so thanks for that question. David, we got on the call and talked about a celebration that we're really having right now, which is the 40th anniversary, and of BuyServe and the fifth anniversary of the merger. But I think, you know, what I realized when I got up this morning is we're actually celebrating your retirement from Evercore. And if my information's right, because, you know, we love to count everything here, you covered BuyServe for 29 years. And that's manned for CEOs, and I'm fortunate to stand on the shoulders of those who came before me. So I cherish that time together. And then I think I'm right in 32 years on First Data. I can't really account for all the CEOs that came before me, specifically post-KKR, but... Thank you for everything you've done for the industry. Thank you for the work. And I think it's a celebration of your career and your retirement from Evercore. Thanks for being here with us today.

speaker
David Toggett
Analyst at Evercore ISI

Thank you so much, Frank. That really means a lot to me. I really enjoy working with you, Bob and Julie. And in the tradition of your predecessors, you continue to create tremendous shareholder value. So I'll continue to watch your progress with great interest.

speaker
Bob Howe
Chief Financial Officer

Congratulations, David.

speaker
David Toggett
Analyst at Evercore ISI

Thank you, Bob.

speaker
Operator
Operator

Next, we'll go to the line of Tianjin Wang from JP Morgan. Please go ahead.

speaker
Tianjin Wang
Analyst at JP Morgan

I was going to say, I can't remember a first data, or if I recall if I didn't get on it. So yeah, I echo that. My question for you guys, just on the margin outlook that was raised, can you just give us a little bit more specifics on the sources of the upside there? And then just a clarification on the merchant processing side. Was that related to some bank losses? I heard a comment that there's some declines in the banks. I just want to clarify if that was volume-specific or due to attrition. Thank you.

speaker
Bob Howe
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, thanks, Tim, Jen. Good morning. First, on the margin outlook, as you heard in our prepared remarks, We raised our margin outlook actually for the second quarter in a row, now greater than 135 basis points. The original guy back in February was greater than 100 basis points. That's really driven by two factors. One is just the scale and volume of the company. As we add more revenue, it drops through to the company average because we have better than company average rates and continue to see good growth. The second one, of course, is ongoing productivity. We continue on an ongoing basis. As Frank said earlier, measure everything, and we continue to see progress towards achieving increased productivity across the organization. And so the combination of very strong organic growth, 15% to 17% this year, plus productivity allows us to continue to expand margin on a multiple-year basis. And then on the merchant processing side, As you know, the processing business line for us is where our clients own the merchant contracts, and so we are providing the back-end processing for those clients. In many cases, it's banks. It could be wholesale ISOs. And what we saw is some volume decline out of those processing contracts in the second quarter. Of course, on a year-to-date basis, we are a plus 1% for the first half of the year, and that's in line with our ongoing expectation that it's roughly flat in this business line going forward.

speaker
Operator
Operator

Next, we'll go to the line of Jason Kupferberg from Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Please go ahead.

speaker
Jason Kupferberg
Analyst at Bank of America Merrill Lynch

Good morning, guys. Thanks for taking the question. Great to see the ongoing revenue performance here. I was curious just to ask about some of the underlying metrics, small business volume growth, enterprise transaction growth. We did see some slowdown there in Q2, probably more than can likely be explained just by leap year. So we're hoping you can unpack those a little bit in terms of where you saw some of the softness. Was it certain verticals or higher income versus lower income consumers? And then just anything you can give us on what you've seen in July So far, we heard from Visa last night about a little bit of softness related to hurricane and CrowdStrike. Thank you.

speaker
Bob Howe
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, Jason, good morning. There are obviously lots of variables in both of those, both the small business and the enterprise business lines. Generally, we saw a bit of a slowing, and in fact, through the second quarter, April and May were in line with our expectations. July came in a little bit slower, but I would emphasize that that was in line with our expectations, so partly why we're maintaining our full-year organic growth rate at 15% to 17%, and in fact, for the merchant segment, holding at the 25% to 28%. despite acceleration in easing of that transitory benefit down in Argentina. So generally the business is performing at or better than we had previously expected outside of that slowing in the transitory benefit, which, by the way, we think is a good thing for the Argentine economy. A more normalized growth rate in inflation and interest is good long-term, and so we're encouraged by that. how that's going and how the overall business is responding.

speaker
Frank Busignano
Chairman, President, and CEO

Yeah, maybe I'd make a couple other general macro comments. One, you know, when you looked at, you know, we're very, very proud of what we believe we've created with the FSBI and our ability to track it. Obviously, we talked about how our numbers don't exactly mirror the FSBI because of our international presence and the fact that we had verticals that we think outperformed. We see a slowness in July, but we see growth in July as we look at it right now. And it's in line with really Q2, if you look at it, and slightly ahead of June. I think also, you know, as you look across our book and our total portfolio, you know, you'll also see the slowing in credit originations across our book, which covers retail private label and general purpose. But all of this within our expectation range, and, you know, I'd also make a secondary point, you know, around, you know, volume and revenue, we are no longer a volume-only shop. We have lots of VAPs both at the enterprise level and at the SMB level, and it really was the design of how to proceed. We have a great feeling about eligibility to grow merchants globally, and that's inclusive of the U.S., So that all falls into our expectation set and I think, you know, in total when you look at the business performance and the portfolio size and scope, our hedge is very, very strong.

speaker
Operator
Operator

Next we'll go to the line of Timothy Chiota from UBS. Please go ahead.

speaker
Timothy Chiota
Analyst at UBS

Great. Thank you for taking the question. I want to hit on Cashflow Central just given about to go live here, six large clients you mentioned. In terms of the monetization, I believe it's a combination of subscription fees and then also transaction fees, including some interchange revenue potentially. I was hoping you could break that down a little bit more and then also talk a little bit about how the revenue will be recognized across the two segments. Thanks a lot.

speaker
Frank Busignano
Chairman, President, and CEO

Yeah, maybe I'll elevate it a hair just so we have pure clarity on our SMB strategy here. both with FIs and on other direct channels. We referred to it in our prior comments, but I want to be very, very clear. First of all, those wins are large institutional wins before the products in the market in that fashion, and our pipeline is tremendously strong. Remember, we're also going to bring this product to Clover. And we're bringing the product to our ISV channels also. And then what we talk about is a, as I like to call it, an SMB bundle. That SMB bundle will include Clover, Cashflow Central, the ability to integrate that information, bringing it to XT, which is also winning heavily in the market right now as our new digital banking platform, and Spendlabs. So I think what you're going to find, and banks that buy love the bundle, right? Yes, they're buying cash flow central, but this will be a long-term growth engine. And you also heard us talk about our ability to go, yes, we have 900 financial institutions. We plan on continuing to grow that number. So cash flow central by itself, It's a standout product, which Bob will walk you through the economics. I want you to focus on the SMB strategy, that it's an integrated strategy. I think we're one of a kind in the ability to deliver digital banking, deliver card spend, deliver Clover, and deliver something like cash flow central, ARAP, to this SMB set. Our banks are loving it. We got two shots at helping our banks generate revenue through it. So I didn't want to minimize the question without articulating the strategy, which is a long-term growth strategy for our total portfolio.

speaker
Bob Howe
Chief Financial Officer

And, Tim, I feel very good about saying up to six large banks before you've gone live. we're quite encouraged on the demand from those financial institutions and the excitement they have. As Frank points out, it's a revenue generator for them. It allows them to bring themselves closer to their small business client, which is an important client base for them. And for us, the opposite of our consumer bill-based solution, which is a fee that the banks pay us but typically do not charge consumers. And so it's an expense item for Cash Flow Central. It's actually a revenue generator. They'll likely charge their small business clients a subscription and generate revenue for themselves and obviously for us as transactions flow. So we feel very good about the opportunity and very encouraged on the very, very early days.

speaker
Operator
Operator

Next, we'll go to the line of Dave Coning from Baird. Please go ahead.

speaker
Dave Coning
Analyst at Baird

Yeah. Hey, guys. Thanks, and nice job. And I guess my question, in the banking subunit, you grew 4% ex-periodic revenue. That's the best we can see in the six quarters or so since you've given the new segment data. Is there something about the market that's getting better or something that you're doing more specifically? And is that, you know, is this higher level sustainable?

speaker
Frank Busignano
Chairman, President, and CEO

Yeah, maybe I cover that, I realize, in my comments about business generation and demand. I didn't include that we see large demand for our services out of the financial institutions. And that's beyond this merchant and CFC capability, which both have tremendous large demand. You know, it goes to XD, which is winning in the marketplace. You heard us talk about how Finzec wins. Our clients are growing, you know, and you can look at things that we've done on Finzec with Juan, which has been a tremendous opportunity. I do think, you know, and you could point to recent surveys published, that we've differentiated ourselves in the service area from where we might have been a couple of years ago with the delivery of a commitment tracker, which allows us and our clients to have 100% synchronization on our commitments and our delivery rates. I think those have really, really distinguished ourselves. Our relationship management model is making a difference and will continue. Demand is strong. So I think it's all those variables that gives us confidence about our ability to be the grower that we talked about today back on I-Day.

speaker
Operator
Operator

Next, we'll go to the line of Darren Peller from Wolf Research. Please go ahead.

speaker
Darren Peller
Analyst at Wolf Research

Hey, thanks, guys. If we could just hone in and just give a little bit more of a broad update on the financial solutions segment, just given the strength we're seeing. Obviously, Cashless Central is strong, and then you have Zelle and some other implementations. But help us understand the driving forces of that growth going from where it is today. And then I know you've talked about it accelerating again into 2020, like through 2025 and into 2026 at your investor day. Is that still what you see happening, and what are the major drivers affecting that?

speaker
Bob Howe
Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, Darren, so our expectation or outlook for this year for the financial solutions segment is uh four to six percent excuse me five to seven five to seven percent year to date we're at six percent so we're right at the midpoint of that full year outlook um we anticipate as we go into 25 and 26 our medium term outlook for the financial solution segment increases a point to six to eight percent so five to seven this year we're right at midpoint halfway through the year and we expect that to accelerate into 2025 and 2026. And that's really driven by the benefits of exactly what you called out, Cashflow Central coming online, growth in XT, our digital banking solution, Finzec, and a broad suite of capabilities that we have continuing to take hold and meet the demands of our financial solutions, the client base. We also have on the issuing side, as you heard us talk about back in November at the Investor Day, several large client wins that will go live in 2025 and beyond. Things like Verizon and Target and Desjardins all giving us a list. We feel quite good about where we are first half of the year and what we see going into 2025 and 2026.

speaker
Operator
Operator

Next we'll go to the line of Dan Dolev from Mizuho Securities. Please go ahead.

speaker
Dan Dolev
Analyst at Mizuho Securities

Hey, Frank and Bob, really nice results. I just wanted to go back to the more sort of like guidance in merchant and macro. I mean, pretty impressive results despite, you know, the, I'd say more muted tone at Visa yesterday. So can you maybe provide just a, maybe like a little bridge in terms of what, you know, what, what needs to happen you know for the guide or the fact that you maintain the guide for the year like is there anything is it all idiosyncratic you know wins etc which is what we suspect or is there anything else in there and again congrats thanks Dan so overall maintaining our total company

speaker
Bob Howe
Chief Financial Officer

organic growth at 15 to 17. In order to do that, we expect the merchant segment to grow 25 to 28% organically first half of the year. We're ahead of that slightly at the top end. Good growth overall. We talked a little bit in our prepared remarks about the easing of the transitory benefit of inflation and interest. You see in our slides, That that number has come down our previous expectation with a full year was that that would provide a 14 point benefit to merchant solutions now nine point benefit. And yet we're maintaining our full year outlook. And that's the strength of things like Clover selling very well value add solutions, both in our small business and in our, um, our enterprise, uh, business. commerce hub continued to see good uptake from our large enterprise clients. We definitely saw an increase in anticipation activity down in Latin America, we talked about in our prepared remarks, as well as an additional quarter benefit of Dollar Teresta. So maybe a little bit of that idiosyncratic view from your point on the Dollar Teresta, expect that to go away at the tail end of this coming this quarter, third quarter, but generally growth across the business. And I think This is one of the hallmarks of Pfizer over the 40 years that we've been in business, anticipating that 2024 will be our 39th consecutive year of double-digit EPS growth. We are incredibly resilient. We respond to changes in the marketplace. We respond to changes in the macroeconomic environment, and it's the breadth and depth of our capability, of our product set, of our client base, and our distribution channels.

speaker
Operator
Operator

Next, we'll go to the line of James Fawcett from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

speaker
James Fawcett
Analyst at Morgan Stanley

Great. Thank you very much, and thanks for all the color and detail here. I want to go back to Clover and Clover growth, and one of the questions we get a lot is you talked at your analyst meeting back in November about using Clover and how the back book could contribute a little bit more going forward to that growth. But I'm wondering if you can talk through a little bit the sales cycle there and where your existing customers see value on Clover and how you're feeling about that and maintaining those customers from a competitive standpoint if they are reevaluating solutions, et cetera. Thanks a lot.

speaker
Frank Busignano
Chairman, President, and CEO

Thank you. Thanks, Jim. Good to hear from you. Hey, you know, I mean, like we've been really, really – feeling good about the Clover strategy and continuing to refine it. Obviously, we know there will be a day where we're going to come back here and say we're headed directly into the back book, but we see so much front book activity opportunity between our international, between our ISV, between how we're thinking about the verticals, like services, like restaurants, that, you know, we're continuing to build that product set that vast. Obviously, it's an outperformer in attrition across the total book. And, you know, we have the benefit of looking at attrition rates from everything. We look at it from what our ISO portfolios are trading versus our ISV portfolios are trading. versus our agent, versus our direct book. And we feel really, really good about how it's performed. We're continuing, you know, to ramp up our investment in value-added services and vertical expertise there. So, you know, we've made a set of commitments, you know, 3.5 and then 4.5 and 10 rates. And, you know, we think about the merchant business being, $10 billion and $12 billion, and all of that feels really, really tight and on track. Obviously, I always have to say we started Clover with seven engineers and three patents, and now we've got a global franchise. So it's straight in our sights. Obviously, we have lots of other great things in our portfolio, But it also is the key to why we have 900 financial institutions. And I would expect over a period of time on this journey, you know, that, you know, if you ask me, we haven't ever made a commitment or guided down any financial institutions. But you should expect us to, you know, continue to grow that at a double-digit number every year. So I don't know if that's helpful, Jim.

speaker
Operator
Operator

And for our final question, we'll go to the line of Ramzi Alisal from Barclays. Please go ahead.

speaker
Ramzi Alisal
Analyst at Barclays

Hi. Thanks for squeezing me in here. I wanted to ask about M&A. And I guess specifically, given the valuation multiples on the public company side seem to be much lower than on the private side, does that tilt the opportunity set for you guys more towards acquiring public peers? Would you have an appetite to kind of move in that direction, Frank?

speaker
Frank Busignano
Chairman, President, and CEO

Well, I don't, you know, it's not like I think about public-private. I think about, first of all, we have a tried-and-true capital deployment philosophy, which I think we've been performing well at. You know, I frequently say, jeez, I wish we had acquired more, and I frequently and always say, but there's nothing that's traded that I wish we acquired. So I think... I think, you know, it's about value. It's about long-term value creation. Remember, we have the best distribution with our financial institutions, our ISVs. Our ability now to take financial products and bring them to our merchants, you know, we didn't really talk about embedded finance at all today, but that is still an engine that's moving for us. So it's, you know, where's value creation? How do we bring it to our clients and our shareholders? I'm really not thinking public versus private as much as being involved in looking at everything humanly possible. I think that's kind of where we are. I'd like to thank everybody for their attention today. Obviously, we've got a great IR team, so reach out to them with any further questions. And have a great day, and I look forward to talking to you in the future.

speaker
Operator
Operator

Thank you all for participating in the FISERV second quarter 2024 earnings conference call. That concludes today's conference. Please disconnect at this time and have a great rest of your day.

Disclaimer

This conference call transcript was computer generated and almost certianly contains errors. This transcript is provided for information purposes only.EarningsCall, LLC makes no representation about the accuracy of the aforementioned transcript, and you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the information provided by the transcript.

Q2FI 2024

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